Climate change and widening inequality are not two separate issues. They're intimately connected. And there's at least one solution to both.

The people who are bearing the brunt of climate change here and around the world are the poor and working class who live in areas increasingly prone to flooding.

Who rely on croplands susceptible to ever more frequent droughts.

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Who depend on outdated water and sewage systems, and older roadways and power grids that are falling apart under the strains of more severe weather.

Who live in fragile structures particularly vulnerable to intensifying hurricanes and violent storms.

Whose health is especially compromised by airborne contaminants, infections, and other diseases that are accompanying climate change.

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So what do we do?

You often hear that reversing climate change will mean fewer jobs, especially for the poor and working class the very people who are bearing the biggest burden from climate change.

But it's not true. Clean energy powered by wind, or solar cells, or water is growing fast, even as the old fossil-fuel industries decline, and generate fewer jobs.

More than three times as many people are already employed generating electricity from solar and wind than from coal, oil, and gas combined. Wind turbine technician is our country's fastest-growing occupation.

This transition to renewables is inevitable, in part because of the so-called "beautiful math" of solar power: Every time the world's solar power doubles, the cost of panels falls 26%. This has led to a 99% decline in the cost of solar modules since 1976, and an 80% decline since 2008 alone.

Donald Trump and his republican enablers are afraid of clean energy because it puts power, literally and figuratively, back into the hands of people and communities.

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Their attacks on science and on health protections are just efforts to maintain billions of dollars in unjust profits and corporate giveaways for the barons of oil, gas, and coal, and to undermine the urgency and speed of a the transition already underway.

We must not let them. Reversing both climate change and inequality can be a win-win proposition.

Robert Reich, former U.S. Secretary of Labor and Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley, has a new film, "Inequality for All," to be released September 27. He blogs at www.robertreich.org.